tanner said:That's Atlantic Beach NC not Atlantic City. And yes it was and still is a regular there.
A typo. I meant to say Atlantic Beach, NC.
tanner said:That's Atlantic Beach NC not Atlantic City. And yes it was and still is a regular there.
radioman148 said:R. Fry said:FreddyE1977 said:From here in Pittsburgh, I think WJR is the farthest constant signal at 228 air miles.
I was able to listen to WJR in the daytime on the stock radio of my VW beetle as far east as Somerset, PA, when I was driving from Michigan to the 1964 World's Fair at Flushing Meadows in NYC. The length of the path from the WJR transmitter site to Somerset is about 260 miles.
Below is a link to the measured daytime field intensity contours of WJR.
WJR radiates an omnidirectional signal 24/7. The variations in these measured contours are related to different earth conductivities in different geographic regions of their coverage area.
http://i62.photobucket.com/albums/h85/rfry-100/WJRGroundwaveMeasuredCoverage.jpg
Also in 1964 I drove from NYC to Chicago and I listened to WABC all the way to the outskirts of Pittsburgh. This was during the day in April and about 2PM when I approached Pittsburgh. This could not happen today with that 770 near Pittsburgh.
FreddyE1977 said:I could get WABC here sporadically during the day before WKFB signed on at 770.
It was an occasional and not an every-day thing.
w9wi said:Not worth trying from here in Nashville, ground conductivity is too low to make it worthwhile.... probably the best daytime regular is 640 Memphis at about 180 miles.
WLW came in all day in Madison, Wis.. That's about 300 miles as well.
rbrucecarter5 said:w9wi said:Not worth trying from here in Nashville, ground conductivity is too low to make it worthwhile.... probably the best daytime regular is 640 Memphis at about 180 miles.
WLW came in all day in Madison, Wis.. That's about 300 miles as well.
WLW was a winter daytime regular in Houston before they got a local 700. KOA was a winter daytime regular in Dallas until Dallas got a local 850. My grandfather reported WLW as a daytime regular in Lubbock, TX when it was running 500kW in the 1930's. His five stage TRF radio had a two foot loop inside the cabinet (I was able to analyze the receiver - tuned RF radios were amazing in the days before superhet).
radioman148 said:When you heard WLW during the winter in Houston was that ground wave or winter daytime skywave?
Natheodan said:I don't know the air miles for each station, but both should exceed 250 miles from Sprink County, SD.
CJOB 680 Winnipeg
WCCO 830 Minnespolis
Bud50 said:I guess hearing KAAY, Little Rock, AR to Mobile, AL, on their daytime pattern would qualify! Can't do that nowadays, it's so pitiful....their night-time signal isn't hardly there any more, either....
Bud
Zach said:Bud50 said:I guess hearing KAAY, Little Rock, AR to Mobile, AL, on their daytime pattern would qualify! Can't do that nowadays, it's so pitiful....their night-time signal isn't hardly there any more, either....
Bud
Yup. I've heard them a time or two down in Mobile at night but never during the evenings. It seemed to be a mix of Spanish language music and IBOC hiss. I did hear WAPI 1070 from Birmingham and the Spanish 1030 from Memphis though just now.![]()
cyberdad said:Zach...
Sidebar question (and apologies for the veer)....
Curious how WEBY (1330) does where you are? Except for WWL, it's now the strongest daytime signal where we stay on the beach (next building east of the Florabama). It even sometimes splatters onto semi-local WHEP (1310).